Category: Health
-
Ancient crater lakes on Mars could have hosted life
[ad_1] What were the lakes of Mars like? The only liquid water on Mars today is thought to exist deep underground, although water ice exists in polar ice caps and as permafrost. Over 4.1 billion years ago, however, there was much more water. At this time, Earth’s close neighbor is thought to have had a…
-
New WHO policy requires sharing of all research data
[ad_1] Science and public health can greatly benefit from the sharing and reuse of health data. Sharing data allows us to have the greatest possible understanding of health challenges, to develop new solutions and to make decisions using the best available evidence. The Research for Health department has helped spearhead the launch of a new…
-
COVID-19 outbreak over at HJ McFarland Memorial Home
[ad_1] <!– COVID-19 outbreak over at HJ McFarland Memorial Home | Napanee today Go to content This website uses cookies to ensure that you get the best experience on your website. Availability [ad_2]
-
Tests show Japanese encephalitis outbreak was six times worse – The Queanbeyan Age
[ad_1] Tests show Japanese encephalitis outbreak was six times worse – The Queanbeyan Age – Aumag Skip to content Tests show that Japanese encephalitis was six times worseThe Queanbeyan era NSW takes action to stop rise in syphilis casesBlue Mountains Gazette Dr. Kerry Chant issues an urgent warning about a terrible diseaseDaily mail Japanese encephalitis…
-
Daniel Boone National Forest plan draws federal lawsuit – Courier Journal
[ad_1] Daniel Boone National Forest plan draws federal lawsuitCourier Journal [ad_2]
-
NASA’s CAPSTONE probe is still at risk, despite progress
—
by
[ad_1] Artist’s depiction of the CAPSTONE.Picture: NASA A series of technical problems following a third successful course correction maneuver threaten to sideline NASA’s CAPSTONE mission. Controllers say they are making progress with the tiny cubesat, but they are not ready to attempt a recovery yet. The 55-pound (25-kilogram) satellite ran into difficulties either during or…
-
Physicists generate new nanoscale spin waves
[ad_1] Illustration of the experiment. Credit: Dreyer et al., Nature Communications (CC-BY-SA 4.0) Strong alternating magnetic fields can be used to generate a new type of spin wave previously predicted only theoretically. This was achieved for the first time by a team of physicists from the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU). They report on their…
-
Her work helped her boss win the Nobel Prize. Now the spotlight is on her
[ad_1] For more than 30 years, Donna Elbert spoke for astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. Credit: Dianne Hofner Saphiere, Susan Elbert Steele, Joanne Elbert Kantner Scientists have long studied the work of Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, the Indian-born American astrophysicist who won the Nobel Prize in 1983, but few know that his research into stellar and planetary dynamics owes…
-
SRSU assistant professor part of the research shown on the cover of “Science” magazine
[ad_1] Sul Ross State University is pictured Thursday, Aug. 4, 2022, in Apline, Texas. (Odessa American/Eli Hartman) Donkeys generally strike us as stubborn and not particularly fast animals. Yet a new study in the Sept. 9 issue of the journal Science now reveals that donkeys spread like wildfire out of Africa about 4,500 years ago…